The Womb, Divinity, and the Silent Disconnection
A Metaphysical Perspective on Womb Removal
Pain. There is no escaping it. The deep, raw, almost indescribable pain that gnaws at the soul when a woman’s womb is removed. The body might indeed heal, the scars might fade, but something within feels like its been severed; an invisible cord or an ethereal link to something much bigger than ourselves.
For centuries, the womb has been revered as the centre of creation, a divine vessel that holds not just the possibility of life but also the essence of spiritual wisdom. But what happens when that portal is taken away? Does a woman remain whole, or does she silently mourn the loss of something deeper than flesh?
These are my thoughts, my insights, pulled from my own experience speaking to hundreds if not thousands of women, the energies I sense, and the whispers of the unseen. Although I love the science, I also cannot ignore the metaphysical, the unspoken grief, and the desperate need to reclaim what has been lost.
The Silent Rift Between Woman and Source
We live in a world where everything sacred is under attack. Our food is poisoned. Our air is thick with pollutants. Our minds are hijacked by low-frequency entertainment designed to keep us sedated. The very thing that makes us human, our ability to connect to Source has been reduced to a mere afterthought.
And for a woman, this connection is deeply tied to her womb. The womb is not just an organ; it is a gateway. A portal. A bridge between the earthly and the divine. Ancient traditions spoke of the womb as the seat of intuition, a sacred vessel that carries the codes of creation. Yet, in modern medicine, it is often dismissed as just another body part, one that can be removed without consequence.
But the consequence is there. I have felt it. The disconnection. The void. The way the energy shifts, how the fire dims. The feeling that something has been taken, not just physically but spiritually. A severing. A silencing.
Many women feel this but cannot articulate it. They wake up feeling hollow, lost, as if a piece of their soul has been extracted along with their womb. They may not have the words, but their spirit knows. The grief is real, even if the world tells them it shouldn't be.
The Unseen Wound That Keeps Us Stuck
In a society that glorifies productivity over presence, we are expected to keep going. To return to work. To function. To ignore the deep, ancestral wisdom that tells us something is off.
But the body doesn’t forget. The spirit doesn’t forget.
Women find themselves battling depression, fatigue, and a loss of purpose. The fire that once fuelled their passions is replaced with a quiet numbness. And yet, they are told it’s all in their heads. That they should be grateful. That they should move on.
How do you move on from something you can’t see but can feel with every fibre of your being?
We try to reclaim ourselves, but how can we do that in a world that demands we exist in fragments? We are torn between work that depletes us and a yearning for something greater. We are trying to be ourselves, by ourselves, but the truth is, we were never meant to do it alone.
The need for deep, multi-layered healing has never been more urgent. Healing that acknowledges the physical, the emotional, and the spiritual. Because without all three, we are only patching our wounds instead of truly restoring what has been lost.
The Path Back to Wholeness
So, where do we go from here? How do we reclaim what has been taken?
The first step is acknowledgment. We must stop gaslighting ourselves into believing this loss is insignificant. The grief is valid. The disconnection is real. And just because the world does not recognise it does not mean it does not exist.
The second step is intentional healing. This is not about blindly accepting what has happened but about consciously working to restore the energetic balance. This might mean:
Womb healing practices: Even without a physical womb, the energetic womb space remains. We can work with it, nurture it, and reactivate its divine connection through meditation, sound healing, and energy work.
Reconnecting with the feminine essence: This means breaking away from the hyper-masculine structures that demand constant output and instead embracing cycles, rest, intuition, and self-nourishment.
Reclaiming sovereignty: Healing is not just about rituals; it is about choosing, every single day, to honour our sacredness despite a world that tries to erase it. This might mean changing how we work, who we surround ourselves with, and how we speak to ourselves.
Sisterhood and community; We cannot do this alone. Healing happens in safe spaces, with others who understand the language of the soul and without judgment.
Most importantly, we must remember that we are still whole. That nothing external can take away the divinity within us. But we must actively choose to reconnect.
These are my insights. They come from a place of intuition, and the deep knowing that we, as women, are meant for more than just survival. We are meant to create, to feel, to be deeply connected to something greater than ourselves.
A womb removed does not mean a spirit lost, but it does mean that we must work harder to restore what has been severed.
This is the time. The time to heal. The time to reclaim. The time to remember who we are.
Are you ready?
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